Characterization of the Interaction Between the Staphylococcus Aureus Clumping Factor (ClfA) and Fibrinogen

D Mcdevitt, T Nanavaty… - European journal of …, 1997 - Wiley Online Library
D Mcdevitt, T Nanavaty, K House‐Pompeo, E Bell, N Turner, L Mcintire, T Foster, M HööK
European journal of biochemistry, 1997Wiley Online Library
The ability of Staphylococcus aureus to adhere to adsorbed fibrinogen and fibrin is believed
to be an important step in the initiation of biomaterial and wound‐associated infections. In
this study, we show that the binding site in fibrinogen for the recently identified S. aureus
fibrinogen‐binding protein clumping factor (ClfA) is within the C‐terminus of the fibrinogen γ
chain. S. aureus Newman cells expressing ClfA adhered to microtitre wells coated with
recombinant fibrinogen purified from BHK cells, but did not adhere to wells coated with a …
The ability of Staphylococcus aureus to adhere to adsorbed fibrinogen and fibrin is believed to be an important step in the initiation of biomaterial and wound‐associated infections. In this study, we show that the binding site in fibrinogen for the recently identified S. aureus fibrinogen‐binding protein clumping factor (ClfA) is within the C‐terminus of the fibrinogen γ chain. S. aureus Newman cells expressing ClfA adhered to microtitre wells coated with recombinant fibrinogen purified from BHK cells, but did not adhere to wells coated with a purified recombinant fibrinogen variant where the 4 C‐terminal residues of the γ chain were replaced by 20 unrelated residues. In addition, a synthetic peptide corresponding to the 17 C‐terminal amino acids of the fibrinogen γ chain effectively inhibited adherence of ClfA‐expressing cells to fibrinogen. In western ligand blots, a recombinant truncated ClfA protein called Clf33 (residues 221–550) recognized intact recombinant fibrinogen γ chains, but failed to recognize recombinant fibrinogen γ chains where the 4 C‐terminal amino acids were altered by deletion or substitution. Previous studies have shown that the C‐terminal domain of fibrinogen γ chains contains a binding site for the integrin αIIbβ3 (glycoprotein gpIIb/IIIa) receptor on platelets [Kloczewiak, M., Timmons, S., Bednarek, M. A., Sakon, M. & Hawiger, J. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 2915–1919; Farrell, D. H., Thiagarajan, P., Chung, D. W. & Davie, E. W. (1992) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 89, 10729–10732; Hettasch, J. M., Bolyard, M. G. & Lord, S. T. (1992) Thromb. Haemostasis 68, 701–706]. We now show that Clf33 inhibits ADP‐induced, fibrinogen‐dependent platelet aggregation in a concentration‐dependent manner and inhibits adhesion of platelets to immobilized fibrinogen under fluid shear stress, indicating that the binding sites for the platelet integrin and the staphylococcal adhesin overlap. The interaction between Clf33 and fibrinogen was further characterized using the BIAcore biosensor. When soluble Clf33 was allowed to bind to immobilized fibrinogen, a Kd of 0.51 ± 0.19 μM was experimentally determined using equilibrium binding data. It was also shown that the synthetic C‐terminal γ‐chain peptide effectively inhibited this interaction.
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